Clinical Pharmacist Jobs in Texas
Clinical Pharmacist jobs in Texas are among the most active in the country, concentrated in hospital systems, integrated health networks, and ambulatory care clinics, with openings for new PharmD graduates through senior clinical specialists. Houston, Dallas, and San Antonio anchor the largest hiring volumes, where employers like HCA Houston Healthcare, UT Southwestern Medical Center, and Methodist Health System maintain sustained demand. The most consistently sought specialties include oncology, critical care, and anticoagulation management. Find a role that fits below and apply directly.
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Description
Summary:
All pharmacists fill orders for drugs, monitor patient drug therapies and provide drug information. Pharmacists provide pharmacy services with compassion, excellence, and efficiency.
Responsibilities:
- Meets expectations of the applicable OneCHRISTUS Competencies: Leader of Self, Leader of Others, or Leader of Leaders.
Operational Duties and Responsibilities
- Prepares and dispenses drug orders per physician request according to established policies, procedures, and protocols.
- Interprets drug orders (verbal and written) and transcribes/verifies into computerized patient medication record accurately. Maintains, accurate, complete patient drug record.
- Compounds and dispenses pharmaceuticals including non-sterile and sterile products, chemotherapy and parenteral nutrition products accurately.
- Issues controlled substances to patient care areas and maintains records as required by law and institutional policies.
- Provides services efficiently and in a timely fashion.
- Maintains current pharmacist license. Ensures applicable CE records and licensure are maintained in department files. Attends staff meetings.
- Completes all competency/skills assessment requirements.
- Supervises and directs pharmacy support personnel. Verifies the daily activities of pharmacy technicians.
- Ambulatory care Pharmacist: Provides ambulatory pharmaceutical care services utilizing approved protocols and/or collaborative agreement with other providers, including managing patient drug therapy, anticoagulation management, providing patient education, and preparing and/or overseeing the preparation and dispensing of medications. Performs duties in the clinical areas assigned such as but not limited to anticoagulation clinics, intensive medical home, transition of care, Discharge Medication reconciliation, etc.
Clinical Duties and Responsibilities
- Ensures safe, appropriate, cost-effective drug therapies for patients according to established policies, procedures, and protocols.
- Monitors drug therapy regimens for contraindications, drug-drug interactions, drug-food interactions, allergies and appropriateness of drug and dose.
- Assists with pharmacokinetics consult service and renal drug dosing per hospital protocol.
- Reads, extracts, and interprets information in patient medical records accurately.
- Detects and reports suspected adverse drug reactions accurately and in a timely manner.
- Sustains the hospital drug formulary, minimizing non-formulary procurements, utilizing therapeutic substitution protocols, and promoting rational drug therapy selection.
- Provides clinical consultation and clarification to practitioners as appropriate.
- Provides accurate, adequate, and timely drug information to the hospital’s professional staff.
- Provides drug education to patients and their families per institutional protocol.
- Participates in the quality improvement and medication use review activities of the department. Collects data, conducts monitors and inspections, and maintains logs, records and other documentation as assigned.
- Conducts designated interventions as defined in department Clinical Intervention activities (IV to PO, Renal Dosing, Pharmacokinetic dosing support, Anticoagulation). Baseline departmental standards for reporting interventions for clinical productivity as defined by departmental goals.
- Participates in antibiotic stewardship, opioid stewardship, and shortage management activities as assigned.
- Attends interdisciplinary rounds when assigned.
- Provides services efficiently and in a timely fashion.
Occupational Hazards
- Potential for exposure to hazardous and toxic substances (including chemotherapeutic, cytotoxic drugs and cleaning solutions), sticks or cuts by needles and other sharp items.
- Risk 0 exposure category.
- Potential for musculoskeletal injuries if proper lifting and carrying techniques are not used.
- Potential exposure to biologic material when participating in direct patient care activities (e.g., patient education, code attendance).
Job Requirements:
Education/Skills
- Doctor of Pharmacy or BS Pharmacy degree required
Experience
- Hospital experience preferred
Licenses, Registrations, or Certifications
- Pharmacy state licensure required within 60 days of start date
- BLS or ACLS is required
- PALS (for pediatric practice) is required
In accordance with the CHRISTUS Health License, Certification and Registration Verification Policy, all Associates are required to obtain the required certifications for their respective positions within the designated time frame.
Work Schedule:
4 Days - 10 Hours
Work Type:
Full Time
See All 54 Clinical Pharmacist Jobs in Texas
Find roles in Texas that match your experience and apply in just a few clicks.
Find Clinical Pharmacist JobsClinical Pharmacist Jobs by City in Texas
Where Texas roles are concentrated, by current openings.
Clinical Pharmacist Job Market in Texas
A snapshot from current Texas openings, updated as new roles post.
Who's Hiring
- CHRISTUS Health13

- University of Texas Medical Branch8

- Ascension4

- Texas Children's Hospital4

- Memorial Hermann Health System3

Top Industries Hiring
- Healthcare & Medical Services34
- Education14
- Non-Profit & Social Services4
- Consulting & Professional Services2
- Biotechnology & Pharmaceuticals1
What Texas Employers Look For
The qualifications that appear most often in clinical pharmacist jobs across Texas.
- Active pharmacist license issued or recognized by the Texas State Board of Pharmacy
- Doctor of Pharmacy degree from an ACPE-accredited college or school of pharmacy
- Completion of a PGY-1 or PGY-2 pharmacy residency program preferred for clinical roles
- Board certification such as BCPS, BCOP, or BCCCP relevant to the specialty area
- Demonstrated experience with clinical documentation in Epic or Cerner electronic health records
- Strong medication therapy management and patient counseling skills in an inpatient or outpatient setting
Clinical Pharmacist Jobs in Texas: Frequently Asked Questions
How do you become a clinical pharmacist in Texas?
You must hold an active license from the Texas State Board of Pharmacy, which requires passing both the NAPLEX and the MPJE before practicing in the state. The path starts with earning a Doctor of Pharmacy degree from an accredited program, followed by licensure through the Texas State Board of Pharmacy. Most clinical positions, especially in hospital and specialty settings, also expect completion of a PGY-1 residency, with PGY-2 training preferred for subspecialty roles.
How much do clinical pharmacists make in Texas?
Clinical pharmacists in Texas earn a median of about $138,260 a year, based on May 2025 Bureau of Labor Statistics wage data, ranging from around $95,950 for the lowest 10% to over $170,170 for the top 10%. Pay rises with experience, specialty, and employer.
Which companies hire clinical pharmacists in Texas?
Employers hiring clinical pharmacists in Texas right now include CHRISTUS Health, University of Texas Medical Branch, and Ascension, based on current listings on Migrate Mate as of June 2026. Texas's concentration of large academic medical centers, regional health systems, and integrated managed care organizations means sustained demand across both acute care and outpatient clinical pharmacy roles.
Which Texas cities have the most clinical pharmacist jobs?
Houston, Dallas, and Austin have the most clinical pharmacist openings in Texas. Houston's density of Level I trauma centers, cancer treatment facilities, and health system headquarters drives the largest share, while Dallas and San Antonio support high volumes through their major academic medical centers, VA facilities, and rapidly expanding outpatient clinic networks.
Are there remote clinical pharmacist jobs in Texas?
Yes, but they're limited compared to desk-based roles, since clinical pharmacy work is largely patient-facing and tied to specific care settings. About 4% of clinical pharmacist openings tied to Texas are remote or hybrid as of June 2026, reflecting a smaller but real segment of the market. The positions most likely to allow remote or hybrid arrangements are in telepharmacy, medication therapy management, and utilization management roles.
How can I get hired as a clinical pharmacist in Texas with little or no experience?
The most realistic entry path is applying directly to PGY-1 pharmacy residency programs run by large Texas health systems such as HCA Houston Healthcare, Baylor Scott and White Health, and the UT Health network, which are designed for new PharmD graduates. Candidates without residency experience can also pursue staff pharmacist or pharmacy coordinator roles as a bridge, building clinical hours before transitioning into a clinical specialist position. A Texas pharmacy license, BCPS candidacy, and documented APPE rotations in acute care strengthen any early-career application considerably.
Where can I find and apply to clinical pharmacist jobs in Texas?
You can find and apply to clinical pharmacist jobs in Texas on Migrate Mate, which lists current openings from employers hiring in the state right now. Search the listings, find roles that fit your specialty and experience level, and apply directly to the ones that match.
See All 54 Clinical Pharmacist Jobs in Texas
Find roles in Texas that match your experience and apply in just a few clicks.
Find Clinical Pharmacist Jobs